New Smithsonian Traveling Exhibition Shows Rarely Seen Photos of Billie Holiday’s Private and Public Worlds

National Tour Begins at Irving Arts Center in Irving, Texas, Sept. 14
August 19, 2019
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Billie Holiday

Billie Holiday performing on stage with her band - Paul "Vice Pres" Quinichette on tenor saxophone, Carl Drinkard on piano, Jimmy Schenck on bass and Bobby "Stix" Darden on drums at Sugar Hill, Newark, New Jersey, April, 1957. 

All photographs © 2018 Jerry Dantzic / Jerry Dantzic Archives. All rights reserved.

In April 1957, photographer Jerry Dantzic had an assignment from Decca Records to photograph Billie Holiday during a weeklong run of performances at the Newark, New Jersey, nightclub Sugar Hill. What unfolded was an unexpected and intimate journey into her private and public worlds. His photos comprise the largest collection of images from any single Holiday club engagement. “Billie Holiday at Sugar Hill: Photographs by Jerry Dantzic” presents 56 remarkable images of the jazz icon that challenge the tragic narrative that frequently defines her. The Smithsonian traveling exhibition begins a national tour at Irving Arts Center in Irving, Texas, Sept. 14. The Smithsonian Affiliate museum will host the exhibition through Nov. 17. It will then go to the Museum of Arts and Sciences, also a Smithsonian Affiliate, in Daytona Beach, Florida, Jan. 25, 2020, through April 19.

Developed collaboratively by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES) and the Jerry Dantzic Archives, the exhibition shows the elegance, complexity, star power and humanity of the consummate jazz artist. Dantzic’s discreet, respectful and artful approach, using only available light, helped forge a bond of trust between him and Holiday. The result is a series of striking images that presents her not only on stage but also among her closest friends and family, projecting warmth, humor and tenderness. The photographer’s unparalleled access also captures Holiday encountering fans, strolling Broad Street in Newark, backstage and performing. Dantzic, an artist in his own right, masterfully captures these moments. The photographs document a significant period in Holiday’s life, just two years before her death at 44.

The exhibition also includes Dantzic’s ephemera from his assignment photographing Holiday’s engagement at Sugar Hill and at the second New York Jazz Festival on Randall’s Island, also in 1957. Some of the objects to be on display include his Leica M3 camera, a photograph of him while holding the camera and his business card from late 1950s.  

The exhibition is accompanied by the book Jerry Dantzic: Billie Holiday at Sugar Hill, With a reflection by Zadie Smith, published by Thames & Hudson.

SITES has been sharing the wealth of Smithsonian collections and research programs with millions of people outside Washington, D.C., for more than 65 years. SITES connects Americans to their shared cultural heritage through a wide range of exhibitions about art, science and history, which are shown wherever people live, work and play. For more information, including exhibition descriptions and tour schedules, visit  sites.si.edu.

Irving Arts Center, an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution, is a part of the City of Irving’s Department of Arts and Culture. Irving Arts Center hosts approximately 1,400 events annually and welcomes more than 100,000 visitors. Each year, more than 200 performances take place in the facility’s two theaters, and approximately 25 exhibitions rotate through Irving Arts Center’s five permanent gallery spaces. For more information, visit IrvingArtsCenter.com.   

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SI-323-2019